Cipher, a company formerly known as Cipher Mining, has released its Q4 and full-year 2025 results, reporting $60 million in revenue, below what analysts expected, with an adjusted net loss of $55 million. It attributed those figures to heavy transition costs as the company shifts away from its core business operations — Bitcoin mining . Those costs are being treated as necessary collateral. Cipher has rebranded Tyler Page, Chief Executive Officer, still tagged the year 2025 a transformative one that reflected continued momentum as the company advanced its evolution into a leading HPC data center development company. During the quarter, Cipher upsized its initial lease with Fluidstack and Google and signed its first HPC lease with Amazon. It also successfully executed multiple bond offerings to finance two of its existing HPC projects at Barber Lake and Black Pearl. “In recognition of this successful shift in our business model and strategic priorities going forward, we are proud to now officially operate as Cipher Digital,” Page declared . The company’s rebrand to Cipher Digital means the company is now focused on sourcing and securing power, developing advanced data centers purpose-built for HPC workloads, and leasing capacity to companies entrenched in the AI race. Cipher has secured financing for the transition To fund the transition, Cipher sold its 49% interest in the three 40 MW joint venture sites, Alborz, Bear, and Chief, as well as select Bitcoin mining machines previously deployed at Black Pearl, to Canaan Inc. for approximately $40 million in an all-stock transaction. The company has also successfully executed three offerings to finance the construction at Barber Lake and Black Pearl, raising $3.73 billion in the process. Cipher raised that amount via three senior secured bond offerings, and it is supposed to support the buildout of the HPC infrastructure. Securing funds for the transition eliminates a major hurdle in the execution of these large-scale projects and leaves Cipher fully focused on the construction and delivery of Barber Lake and Black Pearl, both of which remain on schedule, supported by its best-in-class construction team. “2026 is a year of execution for Cipher as we fully transition the business into a leading infrastructure platform. With construction on track at our existing projects, a deep and expanding development pipeline, and heightened demand from both capital providers and tenants, we are firmly focused on establishing Cipher Digital as the premier developer and operator of data centers powering the next generation of compute,” Mr. Page also said. Solo Bitcoin miner scores rare win Earlier today, a solo miner made headlines for successfully mining block 938092 on the BTC blockchain. The block was mined around 8.04 AM UTC, and the miner earned the full block subsidy of 3.125 BTC plus transaction fees, bringing the total up to about 3.128 BTC. The dollar value of the whole bounty was worth about $200,000 in value at the time. Even though it is rare, it is not the first time a solo miner has earned full block rewards for themselves. Cryptopolitan reported in November and December last year, when solo miners earned six-figure rewards for mining the blocks 924,569 and 928,351, respectively. The BTC network hashrate is currently hovering around 1000 to 1,060 EH/s after recovering from a dip caused by US winter storms, and difficulty just jumped by 15% to 144.4 trillion on February 19, 2026. However, even though finding a block is harder now than ever before, forcing institutional miners like Cipher into AI pivots, solo miner success stories serve as timely reminders for Bitcoin purists, who reminisce on the days when miners secured the network from simple rigs in their garages. If you're reading this, you’re already ahead. Stay there with our newsletter .